Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress

Intervention programs for parents with children with autism seek to increase their knowledge of autism and decrease their levels of parenting stress. Prior research has not addressed this relationship. The present research had as its main focus the relationships between levels of stress of mothers o...

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Main Author: Almutairi, Masooma
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Commons 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/2590
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=uop_etds
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spelling ndltd-pacific.edu-oai-scholarlycommons.pacific.edu-uop_etds-35892021-08-24T05:14:47Z Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress Almutairi, Masooma Intervention programs for parents with children with autism seek to increase their knowledge of autism and decrease their levels of parenting stress. Prior research has not addressed this relationship. The present research had as its main focus the relationships between levels of stress of mothers of children with autism and maternal knowledge of autism, the age of the child, and the functioning level of the child. The level of maternal stress was assessed using the Parental Stress Instrument (PSI). Maternal knowledge of autism was assessed by the Parental Knowledge Index (PKI) developed by the investigator. A demographic questionnaire was used to obtain information on factors such as the functioning level of the child as well as the age of the mother, the age of child with autism, the date of diagnosis, the presence of other children at home, and years of parental education related to autism. Participants included 40 mothers of young children (1–8 years of age) from diverse SES and ethnic backgrounds. The mothers attended meetings at a family support center for autism. The analyses indicated (a) a significant negative correlation between the age of the child with autism and the severity of maternal stress; (b) a significant negative correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the functioning level of the child; (c) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal stress and the functioning level of the child; (d) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the age of the child; and (e) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the level of maternal stress. The lack of a relationship between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and maternal stress is discussed in terms of possible inadequacies in the PSI, PKI, or both, or to limitations due to the limited number of participants. One implication based on the relationship between the child's age and the mother's level of stress is the possibility of designing educational programs with experiential sessions involving the mother and her child which attempt to equip them with adequate levels of “accelerated experiences.” A second implication is that it may be preferable to develop two separate intervention programs, one for parents of younger children and one for parents of older ones in order to address the unique needs of each group. 2002-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/2590 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=uop_etds University of the Pacific Theses and Dissertations Scholarly Commons Educational psychology Psychotherapy Education Psychology Autism Children Knowledge Mothers Stress
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Educational psychology
Psychotherapy
Education
Psychology
Autism
Children
Knowledge
Mothers
Stress
spellingShingle Educational psychology
Psychotherapy
Education
Psychology
Autism
Children
Knowledge
Mothers
Stress
Almutairi, Masooma
Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
description Intervention programs for parents with children with autism seek to increase their knowledge of autism and decrease their levels of parenting stress. Prior research has not addressed this relationship. The present research had as its main focus the relationships between levels of stress of mothers of children with autism and maternal knowledge of autism, the age of the child, and the functioning level of the child. The level of maternal stress was assessed using the Parental Stress Instrument (PSI). Maternal knowledge of autism was assessed by the Parental Knowledge Index (PKI) developed by the investigator. A demographic questionnaire was used to obtain information on factors such as the functioning level of the child as well as the age of the mother, the age of child with autism, the date of diagnosis, the presence of other children at home, and years of parental education related to autism. Participants included 40 mothers of young children (1–8 years of age) from diverse SES and ethnic backgrounds. The mothers attended meetings at a family support center for autism. The analyses indicated (a) a significant negative correlation between the age of the child with autism and the severity of maternal stress; (b) a significant negative correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the functioning level of the child; (c) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal stress and the functioning level of the child; (d) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the age of the child; and (e) a non-significant correlation between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and the level of maternal stress. The lack of a relationship between the level of maternal knowledge of autism and maternal stress is discussed in terms of possible inadequacies in the PSI, PKI, or both, or to limitations due to the limited number of participants. One implication based on the relationship between the child's age and the mother's level of stress is the possibility of designing educational programs with experiential sessions involving the mother and her child which attempt to equip them with adequate levels of “accelerated experiences.” A second implication is that it may be preferable to develop two separate intervention programs, one for parents of younger children and one for parents of older ones in order to address the unique needs of each group.
author Almutairi, Masooma
author_facet Almutairi, Masooma
author_sort Almutairi, Masooma
title Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
title_short Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
title_full Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
title_fullStr Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
title_full_unstemmed Mothers of children with autism: The relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
title_sort mothers of children with autism: the relationship between knowledge of autism and stress
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2002
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/2590
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=uop_etds
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